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DESCRIPTION:8/11 SF Japan Consulate Speak-out to Stop Massive Release Of Radioactive 
 Water From Fukushima & Continued Start-up of Nuclear Plants\nFriday August 
 11, 2017 3:00 PM\nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery 
 St./California St.\nSan Francisco\n\nThe dangers and crisis of Fukushima 
 continue to grow. Hundreds of thousands of tons of radioactive water 
 remains in thousands of tanks surrounding the Fukushima plant in Japan. The 
 government is now seeking to dump this dangerous water into the Pacific 
 ocean threatening the health and safety of not only other parts of Japan 
 but the Pacific rim.\n\nThe Japanese government is also pushing to suppress 
 democratic rights with a “secrecy law” and “conspiracy law” that 
 will be used to prevent journalists and public interest investigators from 
 releasing information about Fukushima and the continued dangers. This bill 
 was opposed  by the UN Rapporteur who has challenged the  increasing 
 repression and intimidation of journalists and the democratic rights of the 
 people of Japan. Already anti-nulcear activists like Professor Shimoji and 
 others in Osaka and other areas have been harassed and arrested for handing 
 out flyers about the efforts to burn nuclear waste and to stop the start-up 
 of additional nuclear plants.\n\nThe Abe government is also demanding the 
 children and families return to Fukushima or they will lose their housing 
 subsidies. This is creating a traumatic conditions for the mothers and 
 parents who do not want their children to be subjected to more 
 contamination and increased dangers of cancer. Already they’re has been 
 an escalation of thyroid cancers throughout the region.\n\n\nWe call for 
 the right of the families from Fukushima to live outside this contaminated 
 area and be compensated by TEPCO and the government. . This bill was 
 opposed  by the UN Rapporteur who has challenged the  increasing repression 
 and intimidation of journalists and the democratic rights of the people of 
 Japan.\n\nWe also oppose the efforts of the Abe government to remove 
 Article 9 of the constitution which prohibits offensive war. The majority 
 of the people of Japan are against militarization and in addition there is 
 a growing corruption scandal of Abe’s cabinet who have lied to the public 
 and covered up corrupt deals with private schools.\n\nThe No Nukes Action 
 Committee calls for all people to join this speak-out on Friday August 11, 
 2017 for the people of Fukushima and opposition to nuclear power plants and 
 militarization of Japan. \n\nWe all on to people to join us this coming 
 August 11, 2017 at 3:00 PM at 275 Battery St. near California at the 
 Japanese Consulate. Make your voice heard.\n\nSpeak Out and Rally initiated 
 by\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\nFukushima’s radioactive 
 water to be released into ocean under new 
 plan\nhttps://www.rt.com/news/396358-fukushimas-radioactive-water-released-ocean/\nPublished 
 time: 14 Jul, 2017 16:24 \nGet short URL\n\nThe plan will have to be 
 approved by the Japanese government.© Toru Hanai / Reuters \nThe 
 “decision has already been made” to release radioactive material from 
 the Fukushima plant into the ocean, according to its owners. Fishermen have 
 reacted with fury to the decision, claiming it will devastate their already 
 struggling industry.\nUnder the plan the radioactive material tritium, 
 which is being used to cool reactors whose cooling systems were damaged in 
 the 2011 tsunami, will be released into the Pacific Ocean.\n"I'm very sorry 
 that Tepco has been prolonging making a decision," the new chairman of 
 Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (TEPCO) Takashi Kawamura told 
 reporters on Thursday, reported Reuters. "We could have decided much 
 earlier, and that is Tepco's responsibility."\nThe plan still requires the 
 approval of the Japanese government before TEPCO can proceed.\nSome 770,000 
 tons (metric) of tritium-containing water is currently stored in 580 tanks 
 at the plant, reported the Japan Times. Toxic water at the plant is 
 currently being treated through a processing system that can remove 62 
 different types of radioactive material, except tritium.\nThe local 
 fishermen cooperative has hit out at the plan, saying it had not been 
 discussed with local residents.\n“Releasing (tritium) into the sea will 
 create a new wave of unfounded rumors, making our efforts all for 
 naught,” Kanji Tachiya, head of a local fishermen cooperative, told the 
 Japan Times.\n\nSituated 10 meters above sea-level, three of the nuclear 
 power plant’s six reactors’ cooling systems were crippled by flooding 
 caused by the tsunami, making the disaster the worst since the Chernobyl 
 catastrophe in the USSR in 1986.\nThe plan still requires the approval of 
 the Japanese government before TEPCO can proceed.\nSome 770,000 tons 
 (metric) of tritium-containing water is currently stored in 580 tanks at 
 the plant, reported the Japan Times. Toxic water at the plant is currently 
 being treated through a processing system that can remove 62 different 
 types of radioactive material, except tritium.\nThe local fishermen 
 cooperative has hit out at the plan, saying it had not been discussed with 
 local residents.\n“Releasing (tritium) into the sea will create a new 
 wave of unfounded rumors, making our efforts all for naught,” Kanji 
 Tachiya, head of a local fishermen cooperative, told the Japan 
 Times..\nSituated 10 meters above sea-level, three of the nuclear power 
 plant’s six reactors’ cooling systems were crippled by flooding caused 
 by the tsunami, making the disaster the worst since the Chernobyl 
 catastrophe in the USSR in 1986.\n\nSo Much For Abe Government's Claim The 
 Fukushima Has Been "Decontaminated"\n\nJapan Government Run TEPCO chair: 
 Fukushima Nuclear plant must release contaminated water-CLEANUP REQUIRES 
 RELEASE OF TREATED CONTAMINATED 
 WATER\n\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20170714/p2g/00m/0dm/005000c\nJuly 
 14, 2017 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nTokyo Electric Power Co.'s new Chairman 
 Takashi Kawamura speaks during an interview at the TEPCO headquarters in 
 Tokyo on July 13, 2017. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)\nTOKYO (AP) -- The new 
 chairman of Tokyo Electric Power Co. says the utility needs to stop 
 dragging its feet on plans to dump massive amounts of treated but 
 contaminated water into the sea and make more money if it's ever going to 
 succeed in cleaning up the mess left by meltdowns more than six years ago 
 at the tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear power plant.\n\nTakashi Kawamura, an 
 engineer-turned-business leader who previously headed Hitachi's 
 transformation into a global conglomerate, is in charge of reviving TEPCO 
 and leading the cleanup at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant. In an interview 
 Thursday with selected media including The Associated Press, Kawamura said 
 despite the massive costs of the cleanup and meeting tighter safety 
 requirements, nuclear power is still vital for Japan's national 
 security.\n\nBelow are highlights from the interview, where Kawamura spoke 
 in Japanese:\n\nCLEANUP REQUIRES RELEASE OF TREATED CONTAMINATED 
 WATER:\n\nMassive amounts of radiation-contaminated water that has been 
 processed and stored in hundreds of tanks at the plant are hindering 
 decommissioning work and pose a safety risk in case another massive quake 
 or tsunami strikes. TEPCO needs to release the water -- which contains 
 radioactive tritium that is not removable but considered not harmful in 
 small amounts -- into the Pacific Ocean, Kawamura said. The method is 
 favored by experts at the International Atomic Energy Agency and Japan's 
 Nuclear Regulation Authority as the only realistic option. Earlier, TEPCO 
 had balked at calls by NRA chairman Shunichi Tanaka for controlled release 
 of the water, now exceeding 770,000 metric tons, into the sea, fearing a 
 public backlash. "Technically, we fully support the chairman's proposal," 
 he said, adding that there is still strong resistance from local residents, 
 especially fishermen. "I think we should have acted sooner. ... We should 
 start moving faster."\n\nPROFITS NEEDED TO COVER CRUSHING 
 COSTS:\n\nKawamura says TEPCO must become more profitable to manage to 
 cover the gargantuan costs of cleaning up Fukushima Dai-Ichi after it 
 suffered multiple meltdowns due to the massive March 11, 2011, earthquake 
 and tsunami. TEPCO'S longtime status as a regional monopoly undermined its 
 profit-making incentive, hobbling its ability to cover most of the 21.5 
 trillion yen (about $190 billion) price tag for decommissioning the plant 
 and compensating dislocated residents. "To reconstruct Fukushima, we must 
 make more profit, and I know we should not be taking about just money, but 
 I think that is important," he said.\n\nDECOMMISSIONING IS THE 
 FUTURE:\n\nTEPCO's main mission now is decommissioning Fukushima Dai-Ichi, 
 an unprecedented challenge that experts say could take decades and will 
 take still more research and development. "That's our main activity and 
 gaining new expertise in the decommissioning is far more important. But I 
 believe there will be a time when decommissioning becomes an important 
 business," Kawamura said. "Decommissioning is a process which takes time, 
 not only for accident-hit reactors but ordinary retired reactors," he said. 
 "I plan to coordinate with those who are studying the possibility of 
 properly turning decommissioning of ordinary reactors into a viable 
 business."\n\nJAPAN NEEDS NUCLEAR POWER:\n\nKawamura says he believes 
 nuclear power is still a viable business and one that will continue to be 
 vital for Japan's energy security, despite the extra costs from stricter 
 post-Fukushima safety requirements and the cost of processing spent fuel 
 and waste. TEPCO is reviewing its business strategy, but based on rough 
 estimates, "I still believe that nuclear is still superior for Japan, which 
 is really a resource- poor country," he said. "Even if we take severe 
 accident measures and factor in spent fuel processing and other costs, I 
 think there are some reactors that can still be profitable." He said 
 nuclear power includes a wide range of technologies that Japan should not 
 abandon, for national security reasons, as China continues to build nuclear 
 plants.\n\nTEPCO'S OTHER REACTORS:\n\nKawamura said TEPCO hopes to restart 
 the utility's Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant in northern Japan, even 
 while the decommissioning at Fukushima Dai-Ichi is underway, so the 
 operable plant can be a major source of revenue for the company. He said a 
 decision on whether to resume operation of the Fukushima Dai-Ni plant, near 
 Fukushima Dai-Ichi, will depend on a financial review. He said he regrets 
 TEPCO's slowness in making a decision and acknowledged calls from local 
 authorities and residents to decommission the second Fukushima plant, which 
 was also hit by the tsunami but avoided a meltdown.\n\nJapan Government 
 Owned Tepco backpedals after disaster reconstruction chief knocks plan to 
 dump tritiated water into 
 sea\nhttp://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/07/15/national/tepco-backpedals-disaster-reconstruction-chief-knocks-plan-dump-tritiated-water-sea/#.WWsBnBQrC-Q\nKYODO\nJUL 
 15, 2017\nARTICLE HISTORY\nPRINTSHARE\nTokyo Electric backed off its 
 tritium-dumping decision Friday after disaster reconstruction minister 
 Masayoshi Yoshino said it would cause problems for struggling fishermen 
 trying to recover in Fukushima Prefecture.\nThe remarks made Friday by the 
 Fukushima native came shortly after the chairman of Tokyo Electric Power 
 Company Holdings Inc. was quoted as saying that the decision to discharge 
 tritium-tainted water from the Fukushima No. 1 power plant into the sea had 
 “already been made.”\nAfter Tepco Chairman Takashi Kawamura’s remarks 
 were widely reported, the utility scrambled to make a clarification the 
 same day.\nAccording to Tepco’s clarification, Kawamura meant to say that 
 there was “no problem” with the dumping plan, based on government 
 guidelines and “scientific and technological standards.” The statement 
 also said that no final decision had been made.\nA government panel is 
 still debating how to deal with the massive amount of tainted water stored 
 in tanks at the atomic plant, where three reactor cores melted after a huge 
 earthquake in March 2011 spawned tsunami that devastated the region and 
 knocked out all power at the plant.\nTritium typically poses little risk to 
 human health unless ingested in high amounts. It remains in filtered water 
 as it is difficult to extract on an industrial basis. Ocean discharges of 
 diluted volumes of tritium-tainted water are a routine part of nuclear 
 power plant operations.\nAt a news conference, Yoshino said there would 
 “certainly be damage due to unfounded rumors” if the tainted water were 
 dumped into the sea. He urged those pushing for the release “not to 
 create fresh concerns for fishermen and those running fishing operations in 
 Fukushima Prefecture.” He also asked them to take care not to drive 
 fishermen “further toward the edge.”\nYoshino, who is not directly 
 involved in the decision-making process for handling the water, was 
 alluding to local concerns about how people’s livelihoods will be 
 affected if people think marine products from Fukushima are contaminated 
 with radiation. He added that while he is aware that many in the scientific 
 community say the diluted water can be safely released, he remains 
 opposed.\n“As I am also a native of Fukushima Prefecture, I fully 
 understand the sentiment of the people,” the minister said.\nWater 
 injected to perpetually cool the damaged reactors becomes tainted in the 
 process. A high-tech filtering apparatus set up at the plant can remove 62 
 types of radioactive material but not tritium. As a result, tritiated water 
 is building up continuously at the plant. As of July 6, about 777,000 tons 
 were stored in about 580 tanks on the premises.\nOn March 11, 2011, tsunami 
 inundated the six-reactor plant, which is situated 10 meters above sea 
 level, and crippled its power supply, causing a station-wide blackout. The 
 failure of the cooling systems in reactors 1, 2 and 3 then led to a triple 
 core meltdown that became the world’s worst nuclear disaster since 
 Chernobyl in 1986.\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/08/06/18801285.php
SUMMARY:SF Japan Consulate Speak-out to Stop Massive Release Of Radioactive Water From Fukushima
LOCATION:San Francisco Japan Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan 
 Francisco\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/08/06/18801285.php
DTSTART:20170811T220000Z
DTEND:20170811T230000Z
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